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...enter and stay at Little Rock's Hall High School after it was integrated by federal troops. "The identity crisis was there at first," she says, "but I got along fine." She reads 1,800 words a minute, will go to Radcliffe on a scholarship. > Dale Gieringer of Cincinnati is towering physically (6 ft. 3 in., 190 lbs.) and intellectually (he tops his class of 289). "A youngster with a brain like this is awesome," says one teacher at Walnut Hills High. In free time, Dale programs computers at the University of Cincinnati's Kettering Laboratory...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Students: A Nourishing of Excellence | 6/12/1964 | See Source »

...Although Cincinnati's two papers, the morning Enquirer and the evening Post & Times-Star, both belong to the Scripps-Howard chain, they stand about as far apart as they can get. Each has its own plant, its own staff and even its own editorial course. In 1958, for example, the Enquirer endorsed Republican C. William O'Neill for Ohio Governor, while the Post plumped for Democrat Mike Di Salle. Separation was part of a calculated Scripps-Howard effort to allay suspicions of monopoly, and to demonstrate that competition can flourish even in a one-ownership newspaper town. Last...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Publishing: Apartness in Cincinnati | 6/12/1964 | See Source »

Monopoly by Circumstance. To Scripps-Howard's executives, Cincinnati had seemed almost the last place where the Justice Department might have been expected to strike. The chain had established its Cincinnati monopoly quite by chance. In 1956, it owned only one of the city's three competing dailies, the Post. Then the Enquirer, which had been bought from the estate of the paper's publisher by Enquirer employees, went back on the auction block. Scripps-Howard's bid topped that of Cincinnati's other evening paper, the independently owned Times-Star. In 1958, the Times...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Publishing: Apartness in Cincinnati | 6/12/1964 | See Source »

...Enemy. In challenging Scripps-Howard's monopoly in Cincinnati, the Justice Department passed over many likelier locales for an antitrust suit. Newspaper monopolies have become the rule rather than the exception in the U.S. Competition exists in only 52 of the 1,434 towns that publish daily newspapers. And where competition has vanished by merger, it has rarely been permitted to survive in spirit, as it does in Cincinnati. In Memphis, for example, another Scripps-Howard monopoly town, the two papers share the same plant and the same ad salesmen...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Publishing: Apartness in Cincinnati | 6/12/1964 | See Source »

American League Baltimore 2Los Angeles 1 Boston 4 Minnesota 3 Chicago 5, 8 Detroit 3, 3 Cleveland 9, 8 Washington 6, 3 Kansas City 4 New York 2 National League Chicago 4 Milwaukee 3 Cincinnati 6, 1 St. Louis 0, 2 Los Angeles Pittsburgh 4 Philadelphia 4 Houston 1 San Francisco 5, 8 New York...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE SCOREBOARD | 6/1/1964 | See Source »

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